Times Colonist

Controlled burns eyed for California fires

Dozens die and thousands of homes burn in wildfires that seem unending

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LOS ANGELES — California’s seemingly endless cycle of wildfires is prompting authoritie­s to make plans to set more “controlled burns” to thin forests choked with dead trees and withered underbrush that serves as kindling to feed monster blazes that force entire communitie­s to flee, destroy homes and take lives.

Fighting wildfires that burn out of control is extremely expensive and even when authoritie­s make mammoth efforts to put out the blazes, they can still cause expensive property and infrastruc­ture losses when the flames reach populated areas.

In October, thousands of California homes burned and 44 people died from wildfires in the state’s most renowned wine region north of San Francisco.

This week, while a fire northwest of Los Angeles still raged after destroying more than 700 homes, the U.S. Forest Service and the state fire agency warned that the threat will remain high even after that blaze is put out because of an estimated 129 million trees that died in California over the last year from drought and beetle infestatio­n.

“It’s fuel just waiting to go up in flames,” said Daniel Berlant, assistant deputy director of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

The agencies are planning more aggressive use of so-called prescribed burns, when fire prevention experts identify areas with bone-dry “surface fuels” and send in crews to burn it or clear it away using chain saws and heavy equipment.

The state since July 1 has burned 37 square kilometres of surface fuels such as dry needles, leaves and bark that accumulate­d over the years and can easily ignite, turning forests into powder kegs, Berlant said. That’s more than double the amount cleared three years ago.

The goal for 2018 is to burn at least 80 square kilometres and for the clearing crews to clean up another 80 square kilometres. To protect population centres, state and local authoritie­s are also increasing inspection­s to make sure residentia­l and commercial property owners are maintainin­g cleared spaces required by law between their properties and forestland.

But the 160 square kilometres that would be cleared is far smaller than the 4,040 kilometres of land that have been burned by California’s wildfires so far this year.

The fire-prevention measures will save money in the long run when compared to the huge costs of fighting fires — especially those near communitie­s because so many aircraft and firefighte­rs are rushed in to protect property and lives.

The cost over just 11 days to fight the largest wildfire in the Los Angeles-area this month reached $74.7 million US on Thursday and was still going up.

Mike De Lasaux, a forester with the University of California’s Division of Agricultur­e and Natural Resources, said the state ideally would burn hundreds of square kilometres of land with surface fuels annually, but he praised any efforts to reduce dangerousl­y overgrown forests. The current plan moved forward following a recent agreement between state and federal agencies along with environmen­tal, logging and recreation­al interests.

De Lasaux estimated the risk of the controlled burns running wild and burning homes at less than two per cent.

But some have turned catastroph­ic, including a 2000 fire set by U.S. Park Service officials in New Mexico’s Bandelier National Monument.

High winds whipped the blaze and flames raced through the community of Los Alamos — home to Los Alamos National Laboratory, a nuclear facility and the birthplace of the atomic bomb. More than 400 families lost their homes.

Opponents of the burns by authoritie­s contend the fires release greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, put lives and property at risk and kill wildlife and old trees that may never grow back.

They also question their efficiency, because the wildfires are on the rise even though controlled burns have increased.

“Well it’s been policy for decades and we still have catastroph­ic fires worse than ever,” said Arthur Firstenber­g, a member of the New Mexico-based anti-controlled-burn group Once a Forest.

 ??  ?? A firefighte­r uses a drip torch during a prescribed burn of about 10 hectares near Inskip, California.
A firefighte­r uses a drip torch during a prescribed burn of about 10 hectares near Inskip, California.

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